Distribution of body fat and risk of coronary heart disease in men and women.

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Earlier studies investigating the risk of developing coronary heart disease in relation to body fat distribution showed inconsistent results, and any sex-related difference in disease risk has not been adequately examined. This review aims to assess current findings on the prospe...

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Κύριος συγγραφέας: Canoy, D
Μορφή: Journal article
Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: 2008
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author Canoy, D
author_facet Canoy, D
author_sort Canoy, D
collection OXFORD
description PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Earlier studies investigating the risk of developing coronary heart disease in relation to body fat distribution showed inconsistent results, and any sex-related difference in disease risk has not been adequately examined. This review aims to assess current findings on the prospective association between body fat distribution measures and coronary heart disease in men and women. RECENT FINDINGS: Current epidemiologic evidence suggests that waist circumference and waist-hip ratio, as indicators of abdominal adiposity, are positively related to coronary heart disease in men and women independently of body mass index and conventional coronary heart disease risk factors. But the magnitude and shape of the associations for these abdominal adiposity indices varied with adjustments for mediating and confounding factors. Interestingly, hip waist circumference was inversely associated with coronary heart disease after adjusting for waist circumference. Because waist and hips are positively correlated but have separate and opposite associations with coronary disease, using waist circumference alone may provide underestimated risk estimate if hip girth is not accounted for in the calculation of this risk. SUMMARY: For adipose tissue distribution assessment to be clinically useful, the ideal adiposity phenotype should provide a single risk estimate that captures the separate 'effects' of abdominal and peripheral adiposity. Although far from perfect, waist-hip ratio may capture separate effects of central and peripheral adiposity. This simple and inexpensive measure could be used to help improve coronary heart disease risk assessment.
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spelling oxford-uuid:fe368620-6c03-4685-b7b2-bee746f3c0412022-03-27T13:34:31ZDistribution of body fat and risk of coronary heart disease in men and women.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:fe368620-6c03-4685-b7b2-bee746f3c041EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2008Canoy, D PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Earlier studies investigating the risk of developing coronary heart disease in relation to body fat distribution showed inconsistent results, and any sex-related difference in disease risk has not been adequately examined. This review aims to assess current findings on the prospective association between body fat distribution measures and coronary heart disease in men and women. RECENT FINDINGS: Current epidemiologic evidence suggests that waist circumference and waist-hip ratio, as indicators of abdominal adiposity, are positively related to coronary heart disease in men and women independently of body mass index and conventional coronary heart disease risk factors. But the magnitude and shape of the associations for these abdominal adiposity indices varied with adjustments for mediating and confounding factors. Interestingly, hip waist circumference was inversely associated with coronary heart disease after adjusting for waist circumference. Because waist and hips are positively correlated but have separate and opposite associations with coronary disease, using waist circumference alone may provide underestimated risk estimate if hip girth is not accounted for in the calculation of this risk. SUMMARY: For adipose tissue distribution assessment to be clinically useful, the ideal adiposity phenotype should provide a single risk estimate that captures the separate 'effects' of abdominal and peripheral adiposity. Although far from perfect, waist-hip ratio may capture separate effects of central and peripheral adiposity. This simple and inexpensive measure could be used to help improve coronary heart disease risk assessment.
spellingShingle Canoy, D
Distribution of body fat and risk of coronary heart disease in men and women.
title Distribution of body fat and risk of coronary heart disease in men and women.
title_full Distribution of body fat and risk of coronary heart disease in men and women.
title_fullStr Distribution of body fat and risk of coronary heart disease in men and women.
title_full_unstemmed Distribution of body fat and risk of coronary heart disease in men and women.
title_short Distribution of body fat and risk of coronary heart disease in men and women.
title_sort distribution of body fat and risk of coronary heart disease in men and women
work_keys_str_mv AT canoyd distributionofbodyfatandriskofcoronaryheartdiseaseinmenandwomen